Staying home instead of taking that summer trip? Need something to take your mind off the economy, your job or lack thereof? Don't furrow (or furlough) your brow; tune in to Staycation TV. USA TODAY spent days and nights at home, combing through cable and syndicated offerings to unearth these nuggets some obscure, some not to air-condition the mind on those long, hot hours in your own living room. Dig in, and remember: The sun is still shining, somewhere.

The National Civil Rights Museum, built around the motel where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968, is drawing criticism that its governing board is too white and too closely tied to big business to watch over such an important piece of black history.

In the weeks after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans' Lower 9th Ward became an icon for a city's ruin. But now people are trickling back to the rutted streets, carrying crowbars and hammers into houses to spend their days knocking down mold-infested walls and ripping up muddy carpets. They're hoping to revive a beloved neighborhood.

Murray Lerner's 1967 Festival! about famed folkies playing Newport is a new release and will be profiled in Friday's DVD column. It's almost as renowned for being little-seen as it is for its excellence. Here are three other concert films that might be new to the masses.

Two Florida men are suing the producers of the reality TV series Trauma: Life in the E.R., saying their privacy rights were violated when they were filmed while being treated for injuries suffered in motor vehicle accidents.